Hunter Jack has attracted offers from Hong Kong but owner Reg Kemister has been knocking back approaches since the youngster was broken in.

"Blair Richardson broke him in for me and told me he is too good to be a racehorse," Kemister said. "He wants him as a three-day event horse. The more people that want him, the more I want to keep him."

Richardson, who has made the long list for the New Zealand Olympic eventing team a few times, is always on the outlook for the right horse. Hunter Jack filled the bill after he gave him "a sore arse" in the final days of his education.

"He has got a lovely action, very athletic," Richardson said. "I knew Reg was thinking about leasing him and told him he should be keeping him after [I had him] a couple of weeks. The next day I was on him in the round yard and he started humping and tripped.

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"I ended up on the ground and he went from a trot to jumping the fence with no trouble at all. He didn't even take a hair off. He is just a natural at it. I couldn't believe it and measured the fence, and it was 1.6 metres, which is the qualifying height to jump, and [Hunter Jack] did it without a problem and no training.

"I got back on the phone to Reg and told him he's not a racehorse and that I wanted him. He said I could have him after he finished racing … he has all the right attributes to be a world-class eventer."

Kemister sent Hunter Jack for a racing preparation but turned down the temptation of naming him Fence Jumper. "It was on the list after what he did at Blair's," he said. "I gave him to Tim and told him the story. He has been impressed by him from the day he got him and he doesn't want to lose him now."

Hunter Jack will have his third start in the benchmark 71 at Rosehill on Saturday. He has enjoyed stable life and keeps improving.

"He is just a smart horse," Martin said. "He has brains, sometimes when you hear those sort of stories you wonder what you are getting yourself into. He soon showed us he is not slow and he has improved with every run. I can see why Blair likes him because he is just a natural. I don't know how far he can go but I think he is up to Saturday class."

Hunter Jack has been part of the resurgence of the Martin stable as he is again being seen regularly in the winner's enclosure around Sydney tracks. Martin will also saddle up outsider Butcher Boy against Hunter Jack but earlier has Magic Millions-bound Let's Frolic in the two-year-olds' race, in which she will start favourite.

Let's Frolic will chase the $500,000 bonus for horses owned by women should she make it to the Magic Millions. The syndicate racing the Charge Forward filly includes Martin's wife Mel and Pam Cornish.

Martin expects improvement from her first-up third to All The Talk as favourite a fortnight ago.